The 50 Decisions Every Service Business Must Make (Deliberately or by Default)
Positioning, pricing, partners, sales, platform, operations, scale, and financial decisions. Any decision made by default is a risk. Quarterly audit tool for founders.
Every service business founder faces the same 50 decisions. They span positioning, pricing, partnerships, sales, platform strategy, operations, scale, and finance. Some founders make these decisions deliberately, informed by research and experience. Most make them by default — through inaction, avoidance, or simply not realizing a decision was being made.
The uncomfortable truth is that every one of these 50 decisions will be made whether you make them or not. When you don't explicitly choose your pricing model, the market chooses it for you — usually the lowest common denominator. When you don't explicitly define your positioning, prospects define it for you — usually as "another consultant." When you don't deliberately structure your partner network, it structures itself — usually around whoever was first rather than whoever is best.
The difference between a business that scales and a business that stalls often comes down to how many of these 50 decisions were made deliberately versus how many were made by default.
Go through all 50 decisions. For each, note your current answer: "decided," "undecided," or "decided by default." Any decision marked "undecided" or "decided by default" is a risk. Revisit those deliberately within 30 days. Print this list. Review it quarterly. Share it with your leadership team.
01 — Positioning Decisions
Decisions 1-5: Who You Are and Why Anyone Should Care
Positioning is the foundation. Every other decision — pricing, sales methodology, partner strategy, content — flows from how you position your business in the market. Get this wrong, and everything downstream becomes harder than it needs to be.
The five positioning decisions:
- Decision 1: What market category will you create or occupy? You can enter an existing category, create an adjacent one, or define something entirely new. The research from April Dunford and Daniel Priestley is clear: creating a new category — positioning as something buyers have not seen before — eliminates direct comparison with established players. When you fit neatly into an existing category, buyers compare you on price and brand. When you create a new one, you set the criteria.
- Decision 2: Specialist or generalist? David Baker's research is unambiguous: narrow positioning enables pattern matching, premium pricing, and reduces substitutes. The specialist who solves one problem for one type of client can charge three to five times more than the generalist who solves many problems for anyone who will pay. Specialization feels risky. The data says generalization is riskier.
- Decision 3: Vertical or horizontal positioning? Vertical means industry-specific — you serve manufacturing, or healthcare, or financial services. Horizontal means discipline-specific — you do leadership development, or operational efficiency, or digital transformation. Baker's research shows that 85% of successful firms choose vertical positioning because it is easier for prospects to discover you. But horizontal can work if you have a distinctive methodology.
- Decision 4: What is your one-sentence positioning statement? "I help [specific audience] [achieve specific result] using [your methodology]." It must pass the cocktail party test — memorable and clear in 10 seconds. If you can't say it in one sentence, you haven't finished the thinking.
- Decision 5: How will you defend against "why not a Big Four firm?" You're not cheaper. You're not bigger. You are more specialized, more measurable, and more accessible. Compete on positioning, not on price or brand. The moment you try to out-brand a Big Four firm, you have already lost.
Most founders default on Decision 2 (remaining generalists because specialization feels limiting) and Decision 4 (unable to articulate their positioning in a single clear sentence). These two defaults, more than any others, determine whether the business attracts premium clients or competes on price.
If you can't clearly state who you serve, what result you deliver, and why your approach is different — in one sentence — everything else in your business is built on sand.
02 — Pricing Decisions
Decisions 6-13: The Highest-Leverage Choices You Will Make
Hermann Simon's pricing research demonstrates that a 1% increase in price yields approximately 10% improvement in profit. A 1% increase in volume yields only about 3%. The implication is uncomfortable but mathematically indisputable: pricing decisions are three times more impactful than sales volume decisions. And yet most founders spend 90% of their time on volume and 10% on pricing.
The eight pricing decisions:
- Decision 6: Hourly, project, or value-based pricing? Time-based pricing punishes expertise and creates conflicts of interest. When you charge by the hour, efficiency costs you money. Value-based pricing aligns your incentives with the client's outcomes — and it is the only model where getting better at your job makes you more profitable rather than less.
- Decision 7: One option or multiple options in proposals? Three options — Good, Better, Best — convert the buyer's internal question from "should we?" to "which level?" and increase average deal size by 30-50%. Always present three. Never present one.
- Decision 8: How will you present pricing — bottom-up or top-down? Present the most expensive option first to anchor perception. Buyers disproportionately choose the middle option, but only when they have seen the top first. Anchoring is framing, not manipulation — and framing is half of pricing.
- Decision 9: Will you publish prices? Publish ranges by tier to build transparency and trust. Customize specifics within proposals after diagnosis. The worst approach is complete opacity, which forces every prospect through a "request a quote" process that most will abandon.
- Decision 10: What is your minimum engagement level? Declare it in the first conversation. Filter on budget early. Every hour spent writing a proposal for a prospect who can't afford you is an hour stolen from a prospect who can.
- Decision 11: How will you handle discount requests? Never discount as the first response. Attempt three non-price alternatives first: enhanced value, reframed value, restructured delivery. Discounting trains buyers to negotiate and signals that your original price was arbitrary.
- Decision 12: Annual or monthly billing? Annual billing solves cash flow and churn simultaneously. The commitment is stronger, the cash arrives sooner, and the relationship is more stable.
- Decision 13: Will you charge for the diagnostic? Always. The diagnostic is the highest-value step in the entire engagement. Giving it away commoditizes your expertise and attracts prospects who are shopping for free advice rather than investing in transformation.
"One-third of your prospects should reject your pricing. If everyone says yes, you're underpriced. If everyone says no, you're overpriced. Calibrate using resistance, not acceptance."
The most common default in this category is Decision 6 — defaulting to hourly pricing because "that's how consulting works." It's how consulting has always worked. It's also why most consulting businesses never scale past the founder's personal capacity.
03 — Partner and Sales Decisions
Decisions 14-28: Building the Network and Closing the Work
Partner decisions determine the quality and culture of your ecosystem. Sales decisions determine how efficiently that ecosystem converts demand into revenue. Together, these 15 decisions shape whether your business grows through leverage or remains trapped in founder-dependent selling.
Key partner decisions that most founders defer too long:
- Decision 14: How many partners in your founding cohort? 15-30. Small enough for density and quality control. Large enough to prove the model works. Too few and you have no data. Too many and you cannot support them.
- Decision 16: How many certification tiers? Three to four tiers create progression aspiration. Each tier represents deeper expertise and higher fees. A single tier is a badge. Multiple tiers are a career path.
- Decision 18: How will you handle underperforming partners? Structured intervention — coaching first, then removal. Quarterly grading, 90-day improvement plans, then pruning. The partners you tolerate at the bottom define the standard the rest of the network measures against.
- Decision 19: Will you enforce minimum engagement fees? Yes. One discounting partner commoditizes the entire ecosystem. Pricing discipline is a network-wide commitment, not an individual choice.
Key sales decisions that separate growing businesses from stalled ones:
- Decision 22: Will you sell to executives or middle management? Always start at the top. Deals initiated at CEO level are 54% larger and close 50% faster than deals that start with middle management and attempt to escalate.
- Decision 23: Will you pitch or diagnose first? Diagnose first, always. Prescription without diagnosis is malpractice — in medicine and in consulting. The assessment isn't a sales tool. It's the engagement itself.
- Decision 25: How will you handle "let me think about it"? Diagnose the indecision. Research shows 56% of stalled deals are caused by buyer indecision, not preference for the status quo. The JOLT framework — Judge the indecision, Offer a recommendation, Limit the exploration, Take risk off the table — addresses the real blocker rather than assuming the prospect is not interested.
- Decision 26: Will you compete in RFPs? Decline unless you can shape the criteria. Experts never audition. If you are filling out a form alongside five other vendors, you've already been commoditized.
"The size of the gap determines the size of the deal. Qualify on the prospect's pain gap, not their company size. Small gaps mean small deals regardless of revenue."
The most dangerous default in this section is Decision 23. Founders who lead with a pitch rather than a diagnosis are playing a game they can't win — because the prospect has no basis for evaluating the pitch without first understanding their own gap.
04 — Platform and Operations Decisions
Decisions 29-40: Building the Machine That Runs Without You
Platform decisions define your technology and marketplace strategy. Operations decisions define how the business runs day-to-day. Together, they determine whether the founder can ever step back — or whether the business requires their constant presence to function.
Platform decisions that shape the long game:
- Decision 29: Build technology first or prove the model manually? Manual first. Always. Andrew Chen calls this "Flintstoning" — proving the core interaction works with human effort before investing in technology. The graveyard of service businesses is filled with beautiful platforms that automated processes nobody wanted.
- Decision 30: Open platform or curated marketplace? Curated. Quality begets quality. Early quality decisions are permanent through path dependency — the first 20 partners you admit define the standard that every subsequent partner is measured against.
- Decision 31: What is your core value unit? The completed assessment. It is the artifact that triggers every engagement and every viral loop. Every other piece of content, every sales conversation, and every partner engagement flows from this single unit of value.
- Decision 32: Will you compete with your own partners? Not after Year 1. Competing with your own supply side destroys the trust that the entire ecosystem depends on.
Operations decisions that prevent founder burnout and enable scale:
- Decision 34: Daily huddle? Yes. Fifteen minutes daily saves hours of misalignment weekly. Non-negotiable. It's the minimum viable operating rhythm.
- Decision 35: What meeting rhythm? Five levels: daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, annual. Never skip levels. The rhythm IS the execution system. Businesses that operate on ad-hoc meetings are businesses where nothing gets followed up on.
- Decision 36: How will you document processes? Live Capture — record yourself doing it and hand it off immediately. Perfection before transfer is procrastination disguised as quality. A rough recording that transfers knowledge today beats a polished SOP that gets written "next quarter."
- Decision 37: When will you take the vacation test? One day by Month 6. One week by Month 12. Four weeks by Month 18. The vacation test is a diagnostic, not a reward. If the business breaks when you leave for a week, it's not a business — it's a job you created for yourself.
- Decision 40: How will you prevent founder burnout? Structured prevention. Distribute responsibility by Month 6. Hire operational support by Year 2. Protect calendar for strategic thinking. Burnout is an operational failure, never a badge of honor.
The most commonly defaulted decision in this section is Decision 37. Founders tell themselves they will take the vacation test "when things settle down." Things never settle down. The vacation test must be scheduled deliberately, or it will never happen — and without it, you have no data on whether the business can function without you.
05 — Scale and Financial Decisions
Decisions 41-50: Growth, Money, and Knowing When Enough Is Enough
Scale decisions determine how big the business should become. Financial decisions determine whether it survives long enough to get there. These final ten decisions are where founders most frequently confuse ambition with strategy.
Scale decisions that require honest self-assessment:
- Decision 41: How big? Define "enough" explicitly. Most service businesses optimize at 50-200 practitioners and a defined revenue target. Unlimited growth is the absence of a strategy, not a strategy. Paul Jarvis's challenge is worth sitting with: "What if the answer is not more?"
- Decision 42: Density or breadth first? Density. Achieve critical mass in one market before expanding. Premature geographic scaling is how ecosystems die — you end up with one partner in 20 cities instead of 20 partners in one city, and none of them have enough local density to generate referrals.
- Decision 43: Cohort-based or continuous enrollment? Cohort-based. It creates scarcity, enables shared onboarding, and builds peer cohesion. Continuous enrollment produces a network where nobody shares a common starting point and nobody feels like they belong to anything.
- Decision 44: When do you launch Cohort 2? After Cohort 1 converts to paid and mentor-partners are identified. Scaling before the model works amplifies failure. Scaling after the model works amplifies success. The difference is timing, and the timing depends on proof.
- Decision 45: Annual ceiling check. Ask three questions every year: Do you WANT to grow further? Can your systems support it? Will quality be maintained? Growing beyond your systems is how brands die.
Financial decisions that determine survival:
- Decision 46: Revenue focus or profit focus? Profit. Revenue without profit is vanity. Track profit per partner, not total revenue. A business with 20 profitable partners is healthier than a business with 100 unprofitable ones.
- Decision 47: External investment or bootstrapped? Bootstrapped. Service businesses with recurring revenue can self-fund. External capital creates misaligned incentives — investors want scale and exit; you may want profitability and freedom.
- Decision 48: When should you raise certification fees? Annually, by 50% of demonstrated value increase. If partner outcomes improve by 20%, raise fees by 10%. This isn't price gouging. It's value alignment.
- Decision 49: Will you offer lifetime memberships? Never. Lifetime memberships sever the renewal relationship and eliminate your ability to adjust pricing. They feel generous in the moment and become a liability forever.
- Decision 50: Cash reserve target? Three to six months of fixed costs. A service business without cash reserves is one bad quarter from catastrophe. Cash reserves are the difference between surviving a downturn and becoming a cautionary tale.
"The decisions that are made by default — because nobody explicitly decided — are usually the most dangerous. Print this checklist. Review it quarterly. The decisions you avoid are the decisions that will define you."
The most dangerous default in this section is Decision 46. Founders who optimize for revenue growth instead of profit per partner build businesses that look impressive on a slide deck and collapse under the weight of their own overhead. Profit focus isn't a lack of ambition. It's the discipline that makes ambition sustainable.
06 — The Quarterly Audit
A Practice for Making the Invisible Visible
Reading through 50 decisions once is useful. Reviewing them quarterly is transformational. The quarterly audit isn't about changing every answer — it's about identifying which decisions have drifted from deliberate back to default.
The quarterly audit process:
- Step 1: Score each decision. Mark each of the 50 as "decided," "undecided," or "decided by default." Be honest. A decision you made 18 months ago and have not revisited may have reverted to default through drift.
- Step 2: Count the defaults. If more than 10 of the 50 decisions are undecided or defaulted, you have significant strategic risk. Each default is a place where the market, your competitors, or inertia is making choices for you.
- Step 3: Prioritize three. You can't address all defaults simultaneously. Choose the three that have the highest impact on your current stage. In Year 1, these are usually positioning, pricing, and founding cohort decisions. In Year 2, they shift to partner management, operations, and scale decisions.
- Step 4: Decide within 30 days. Set a deadline. A decision made imperfectly but deliberately is almost always better than a decision deferred. You can revise a deliberate decision. You can't revise a default — because you were never aware of it in the first place.
- Step 5: Share with your team. The decisions that only live in the founder's head are the decisions that only the founder executes. When the leadership team knows the answers to all 50 decisions, they can make aligned choices without waiting for the founder's input on every issue.
The power of the 50-decision framework is not in the answers. The answers will vary by business, by market, and by stage. The power is in the questions themselves — in forcing a systematic review of every structural choice that determines whether a service business scales or stalls.
Every service business is the sum of these 50 decisions. The businesses that thrive are the ones where the majority of those decisions were made deliberately, reviewed regularly, and adjusted when circumstances changed. The businesses that struggle are the ones where most of these decisions were never made at all — they just happened.
Print the list. Block 90 minutes on your calendar. Go through all 50. The decisions you have been avoiding are almost certainly the ones that matter most.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.